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Ray Russell - Ready Or Not (Extended Version) '1977 / 2023

Ready Or Not (Extended Version)
ArtistRay Russell Related artists
Album name Ready Or Not (Extended Version)
Country
Date 1977 / 2023
GenreJazz
Play time 1:00:18
Format / Bitrate Stereo 1420 Kbps / 44.1 kHz
MP3 320 Kbps
Media CD
Size 463 MB
PriceDownload $3.95
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Tracks list

Tracklist:

1. Ready Or Not (03:42)
2. The Whole Of Tomorrow (04:24)
3. Amy In May (02:45)
4. Slave (05:50)
5. Liberty Caps From The Coast (01:49)
6. Living For The City (04:04)
7. The Clapping Song (03:25)
8. Teaser For Lisa (03:44)
9. Sweet Surrender (03:57)
10. Eighth House (03:30)
11. What Trousers Are These (02:36)
12. Q (02:16)
13. Sweet Surrender (Backing Track) (03:36)
14. The Clapping Song (Backing Track) (03:25)
15. The Pain Of Love (05:05)
16. I Need Your Love (04:58)
17. The Clapping Song (Outtake) (01:05)



 moreBorn in 1947, Russell's introduction to the John Barry Seven came when
he read in the music press that the band's longtime lead guitarist, Vic Flick,
was leaving the group. He auditioned on a day off from his regular job and won
the spot by pretending that he could read music; he learned musical notation as
a member of the band after establishing his virtuosity. Russell's talent was
incontestable. He made a good successor to Flick, and began his soundtrack
career with Thunderball in 1965. He stayed with the band to its end in early
1965, and through his association with Barry for another two decades he appeared
on seven James Bond soundtracks. He moved to the guitar chair for Georgie Fame &
the Blue Flames, and by the end of the '60s he was working in tandem with Chris
Spedding in the Mike Gibbs band (he had worked off and on with the latter since
1963), alongside bassist Jack Bruce and reedman Alan Skidmore. Russell signed a
solo deal with CBS and released Turn Circle, his acclaimed debut, in 1968.

Dragon HillDuring the '70s, Russell issued another album for CBS: the acclaimed
Dragon Hill, with horn players Harry Beckett and Nick Evans alongside his trio.
Critically noted as a showcase for his blues and jazz chops, Russell displayed a
hankering for a freer approach. 1971's misunderstood (at the time, but now
regarded as a classic) Rites and Rituals, his final outing for the label, drew
as much on free jazz as it did post-bop. He was Bill Fay's guitarist on both his
self-titled offering and the famed Time of the Last Persecution. Their
friendship and working relationship continued into the 21st century. In 1973,
Russell pursued free improvisation with Secret Asylum, released by Blue Note
co-founder Alfred Lion's Black Lion label.

The restless Russell also passed through such ensembles as the Rock Workshop and
Ian Carr's jazz-rock combo Nucleus. He co-founded Chopyn with keyboard player
Ann Odell and drum legend Simon Phillips. Russell played with Roxy Music's Andy
Mackay on the soundtrack of the British television series Rock Follies, and
became a member of Stackridge for a time. He served as guitarist for the group
Smith & D'Abo and played a role in benefit performances known as The Secret
Policeman's Ball, alongside Eric Clapton, Neil Innes, et al. (as well as
appearing in concert). He played on the soundtrack for Sgt. Pepper's Lonely
Hearts Club Band film and on Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice's original cast
recording of Evita. He released the fusion outing Ready or Not in 1977 with
Phillips, Peter Van Hooke, Foster, Tony Hymas, and strings. While his career as
a sideman included appearances on seminal recordings by Frankie Miller and the
Sensational Alex Harvey Band, Russell also began working for various British
library music houses, first as a session guitarist, then as a composer,
arranger, and producer.

During the early '80s, he played and recorded the music of Gil Evans. His career
in the sound library field was exploding. He issued dozens of outings for Bruton
Music and other labels, sometimes collaborating with Alan Hawkshaw. In addition,
Russell continued as a sideman. His playing appeared on albums by Heaven 17,
Mike Batt, Lucio Battisti, Julien Clerc, Tina Turner, Julian Lennon, and Scott
Walker, to name a few.

Russell later formed his own group, the Ray Russell Band. He was a regular
participant at the Montreux Jazz Festival throughout the '80s and '90s, working
in various group contexts including drummer Simon Phillips' band, while
continuing to issue sound library outings. He also released 1987’s
Childscape, featuring appearances by Evans and Mark Isham, on the Theta label
(reissued several times), 1990’s A Table Near the Band on Last Chance
Music, 1993's Centennial Park with RMS, and 2006’s tribute Goodbye
Svengali on Cuneiform. The latter was a tribute to Evans, with Russell's
unreleased recordings with Evans, and other tracks cut for him. In 2007, Russell
released Secret Asylum, a previously unissued tape from 1973; it was later
picked up for international distribution, while some of his pop material from
his early days with Joe Meek surfaced as well. In 2008, he, drummer Ralph
Salmins, and engineer Rik Walton co-founded Made Up Music, an archive, label,
and clearing house for sound library recordings; these were sold digitally and
mailed to film music editors. They later merged with the library sound company 5
Alarm Music. In 2012, he and drummer Alan Rushton appeared on Bill Fay's
comeback album Life Is People.

Russell returned to recording proper in 2013 with Now, More Than Ever, a
jazz-rock date for Abstract Logix. In 2014, he was convinced by guitarist and
friend Henry Kaiser to revisit the approach of his earliest improvisational
recordings. The end result was the co-billed octet outing The Celestial Squid.
The set was recorded live at Fantasy Studios and issued by Cuneiform in early
2015, the same year he appeared on Fay's Who Is the Sender? In 2018 he worked
with Mackay again on 3 Psalms, and the following year with the saxophonist and
guitarist Phil Manzanera on Roxymphony. He also guested on Greg Foat's The Mage.
In May of 2020, the archival label Jazz In Britain released the Ray Russell
Quartet's Spontaneous Event: Live, Vol. 1: 1967-69. Russell issued Fluid
Architecture on Cuneiform in September of 2020. His sidemen included old friends
Phillips, Salmins, and Foster, alongside saxophonist Chris Biscoe and
bassist/Chapman Stick master George Baldwin. © Thom Jurek



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